Menu
Tech

U.S. Open Will Be First Grand Slam With Electronic Line Calling at Every Match

Venus Williams (R) and Serena Williams look at the replay of a disputed call during the Women’s Doubles final of the 2009 U.S. Open. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images)

The U.S. Open, which pioneered the use of video replay in 2006, will become the first Grand Slam tournament to install electronic line calling capabilities for every match later this summer.

All 16 competition courts will have Hawk-Eye technology, more than doubling the seven served last year. In 2017, Hawk-Eye was only available on the four main courts (Arthur Ashe Stadium, Louis Armstrong Stadium, Grandstand, and Court 17) and Courts 5, 10, and 13.

The latter three relied on a dedicated replay room inside Arthur Ashe, a centralized system mimicking those now used by MLB, the NFL, and the World Cup, among others. That set-up will be in place for the new courts as well. The main four courts will continue to have their own dedicated replay team in the venue.

This expansion was made possible when the USTA rebuilt the south field courts and new Grandstand stadium back in 2016. Work crews laid fibers and cables in advance of that project.

“We think it’s the right thing to do,” said U.S. Open tournament director David Brewer in a statement. “It’s the fair thing for the players. We should provide a tournament where the conditions from court to court, no matter whether it’s Court 15 or Arthur Ashe Stadium, are as close to identical as possible.”

SportTechie Takeaway

Brewer’s noble sentiment is a good one. The time for this well-received technology has long since come. Even a qualifier competing on a back court should receive the same assurance of fairness and accuracy as a top seed in a stadium. The process is quick and purportedly precise—Hawk-Eye has said its calls are accurate to within 2.6 millimeters, or one-tenth of an inch. 

The Next Gen ATP Finals last November even utilized Hawk-Eye for every line call, sending visual and audio alerts to the chair umpire with a tenth of a second.

SBJ Morning Buzzcast: May 10, 2024

Start your morning with Buzzcast with Austin Karp: A very merry NFL Christmas on Netflix? The Braves and F1 deliver for Liberty Media investors; the WNBA heads to Toronto; and Zelle gets in on team sports sponsorship.

Phoenix Mercury/NBC’s Cindy Brunson, NBA Media Deal, Network Upfronts

On this week’s pod, SBJ’s Austin Karp chats with SBJ NBA writer Tom Friend about the pending NBA media Deal. Cindy Brunson of NBC and Phoenix Mercury is our Big Get this week. The sports broadcasting pioneer talks the upcoming WNBA season. Later in the show, SBJ media writer Mollie Cahillane gets us set for the upcoming network upfronts.

SBJ I Factor: Molly Mazzolini

SBJ I Factor features an interview with Molly Mazzolini. Elevate's Senior Operating Advisor – Design + Strategic Alliances chats with SBJ’s Ross Nethery about the power of taking chances. Mazzolini is a member of the SBJ Game Changers Class of 2016. She shares stories of her career including co-founding sports design consultancy Infinite Scale career journey and how a chance encounter while working at a stationery store launched her career in the sports industry. SBJ I Factor is a monthly podcast offering interviews with sports executives who have been recipients of one of the magazine’s awards.

Shareable URL copied to clipboard!

https://www.sportsbusinessjournal.com/Daily/Issues/2018/06/29/Technology/u-s-open-first-grand-slam-hawk-eye-electronic-line-calling-every-match.aspx

Sorry, something went wrong with the copy but here is the link for you.

https://www.sportsbusinessjournal.com/Daily/Issues/2018/06/29/Technology/u-s-open-first-grand-slam-hawk-eye-electronic-line-calling-every-match.aspx

CLOSE